Croatian poet and dramatist whose epic poem Osman (the oldest existing copy is dated approximately 1651; it was first published in 1826; Eng. trans. Osman) was the outstanding achievement of the Renaissance and Baroque flowering of art and literature that gave Dubrovnik the name of the “South Slav Athens.” Son of a five-time knez (the highest government post, held for only one month) of the Dubrovnik city-republic, Gundulić himself occupied various public positions, serving as a captain of the night, supervisor of the armament magazine, member of the Senate, and judge. He was a pupil of the Croatian priest Petar Palikuća, who did translations from the Italian, and of Siena’s Camilo Camilli (a great connoisseur of Torquato Tasso ’s Gerusalemme liberata), and in his youth Gundulić wrote 10 plays, which were performed with musical accompaniment. Some parts of them may have been sung. These plays were based on motifs from either classical mythology or Tasso’s epic; they had fantastic...